These days the Israeli regime's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under the rubble of the scandals surrounding him one by one, including the “the security affair” incident where classified documents were leaked from his office.

Iran Press/West Asia: The details of the “security affair” incident had been censored, but the gag order imposed on it has been partially lifted.

Former member of the Israeli War Council Benny Gantz and opposition leader Yair Lapid held Netanyahu responsible for the scandal and everything that happened with his staff and office. 

Also, some sources that Netanyahu is planning to sacrifice some of his advisors as “scapegoats” and hold them responsible for evading the matter, putting them in the line of fire of the Israeli officials.

Elsewhere, Chief of Staff of the Israeli occupation army Herzi Halevi and War Minister Yoav Gallant have put pressure on Bibi to reach a ceasefire agreement.

Yet, military censorship is the straw Bibi is catching, claiming that it prevented the revelation of details from tarnishing the reputation of his office, and that his staff did not leak any confidential information.

Netanyahu’s spokesperson Omer Dostri is implicated in a major security breach after leaking footage following Israel’s attack on Iran. The Jerusalem Post said Dostri revealed a recording containing classified information from the Kirya military headquarters in Tel Aviv.

The Israeli newspaper reported that the regime wants to get closer to a ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon, believing there is not much that can be achieved militarily, and is frustrated by the daily losses of soldiers.

The admissions come as more than one year passes from the Israeli all-out war on Gaza to destroy Hamas Palestinian resistance group after Operation Al-Aqsa Flood on October 7, 2023, where the Palestinian group took about 250 Zionist captives, 150 of them were exchanged with Palestine's Hamas.

Now, killing more than 43,000 people in Gaza, most of them children and women, the regime could neither destroy Hamas nor free the remaining 100 captives, facing the music of Zionist settlers' protests in Tel Aviv's streets.  

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